Web Running Out of Addresses (IP)
Register

We are the best invite forum on the internet! Here you will find free invites, free seedboxes, free bonuses, and much more. Our members know the true meaning of sharing and have created a truly global bittorent community! Our site has the most up to date information on all private trackers and our members will guide you and introduce you to this truly secretive and enlightened club. Ready to get started? Register now!


Page 1 of 2 1 2 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 19
  1. #1

    Join Date
    May 2010
    Location
    Romania
    Posts
    146

    Default Web Running Out of Addresses (IP)

    The Internet is about to run out of new addresses, a milestone that is spurring Web giants like Facebook Inc. and Google Inc. to develop new versions of their sites and prompting carriers like AT&T Inc. and others to upgrade networks.

    This week, the last batch of existing Internet protocol addresses is set to run out. The solution to the dilemma? A new addressing scheme that tech companies like Facebook and Google are planning to test. WSJ's Ben Worthen reports.


    This week, the organization that oversees Internet addresses is expected to dole out its last batch of existing Internet protocol addresses, a step akin to telephone companies running out of numbers to give customers.
    Internet protocol addresses are numerical labels that direct online traffic to the right location, similar to the way a letter makes its way through the postal system. Such routing is generally invisible to users—when they type in Welcome to Facebook - Log In, Sign Up or Learn More, for instance, they are actually connected to a computer located at the numerical address 66.220.149.32. It is those numbers that are in dwindling supply.
    View Full Image









    While there is a new Internet addressing system ready to go that greatly expands the number of addresses, it isn't compatible with the existing system. So in June, Google, Facebook, Yahoo Inc. and others will switch over to the new addresses for one day in the first wide-scale test of the new network, dubbed IP version six, or IPv6.
    A permanent shift to a new Internet addressing system is still years off. But it is now inevitable, said Lorenzo Colitti, an engineer at Google who is helping to oversee the search company's transition to IPv6. Switching to the new network, "is critical to preserving the Internet as we know it," he said, adding it's the only way that Google will be able to be accessible to future users of the Internet.
    <div class="noFlash"> {if djIsFlashPossible} <p>The version of Adobe Flash Player required to view this interactive has not been found. To enjoy our complete interactive experience, please download a free copy of the latest version of Adobe Flash Player <a href="http://www.adobe.com/shockwave/download/download.cgi?P1_Prod_Version=ShockwaveFlash">here</a></p> {else} <p>This content can not be displayed because your browser does not support the Adobe Flash player required to view it.</p> {/if} </div>


    The shift—similar to the move to 10-digit telephone dialing—is necessary because of a quirk in the way the Internet is designed. The Web is made up of networking equipment like routers and servers that decode electronic signals using an addressing system developed more than 30 years ago.
    That addressing system is called IP version four, or IPv4, which allows for about 4.3 billion possible addresses. In the 1970s, that number of IP addresses was more than enough as the Internet only connected a small number of government and university researchers.
    But now all sorts of devices connect to the Internet as does an ever-growing percentage of the world's population. That has caused the number of available addresses to drop from more than 1 billion in June 2006 to just 117 million in December 2010, according to the American Registry for Internet Numbers.
    More than a decade ago, the Internet's founding fathers developed the much longer IPv6 addressing system that allows for a near-infinite number of websites and devices. Still, less than 0.25% of people currently access the Internet with IPv6 connections, Google says.
    If the changeover to IPv6 goes well, the transition—likely to happen gradually over a number of years—won't have a big impact on consumers. Some older operating systems and home routers won't work with the new addresses, but ones bought in the last couple of years should, according to networking experts.
    View Full Image



    Bloomberg News Businesses need to install networking gear compatible with the new addresses and build connections to their websites for people using the new addresses. Above, an Asustek Eee Slate EP121 tablet computer.








    Telecommunications companies such as AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc. have been upgrading their Internet and cellular networks. For instance, over the past few years, AT&T has spent "hundreds of millions" of dollars retooling its Internet network for large companies, in addition to regularly buying networking equipment that's compatible with the new addressing system, said Dale McHenry, vice president of enterprise network services.
    When Verizon Wireless begins adding cellphones to its new 4G network later this year, every device will be given one of the new breed of addresses, though the phones will work with websites addressed under the old system, too."It's part of our device requirements," said Chris Neisinger, executive director of technology at Verizon Wireless. "It has to be IPv6 compatible to be on the network."
    Businesses, however, need to install networking gear compatible with the new addresses and build connections to their websites for people using the new addresses.
    Last year the federal government's chief information officer said all new technology purchases made by government agencies must be compatible with the new addressing scheme and ordered the agencies to upgrade websites amd equipment.
    Companies like Cisco Systems Inc., which makes routers and switches, stand to benefit. "It's a gold mine because everybody eventually has to upgrade" to equipment that is compatible with IPv6, which Cisco began selling several years ago, said Joel Conover, a Cisco senior marketing manager.
    At Facebook, the company said it began planning for a transition to IPv6 three years ago, steadily upgrading its equipment with gear that supports both the new and the old addressing scheme. It launched its IPv6 website last summer, though it is rarely visited.
    That site, www.v6.facebook.com, needs to be typed in manually and can only be viewed by people with an IPv6 connection, meaning that more than 99% of Facebook visitors who use the old addresses would get an error message.
    Facebook, Google and others announced the June test last month along with the Internet Society, a nonprofit focused on Internet policy, in order to test how well their IPv6 sites work.
    Up to now, the new addressing scheme has been stuck in a chicken-and-egg problem: No one wants to develop services using the new scheme until there's a network for accessing them; no one wants to build the network until there are services to drive demand.
    One of the reasons Facebook is participating in the June test, dubbed World IPv6 Day, is to try to break that standoff, says Jonathan Hellinger, Facebook's vice president of technical operations.
    Other companies haven't yet begun revamping their websites. Bryan Panovich, manager of network services for Eaton Corp., said the Cleveland maker of electrical and hydraulic partsis in the process of securing IPv6 addresses, but isn't planning to update its websites until more customers and other visitors to the sites are using IPv6 connections.
    Running out of the old addresses should help hasten the switchover. "The handing out of the last space is irreversible," said Leslie Daigle, chief internet technology officer for the Internet Society, adding that it should show "those who have to move that this is not a hypothetical."
    Write to Ben Worthen at ben.worthen@wsj.com and Cari Tuna at cari.tuna@wsj.com


  2. To remove ads become VIP. Inquire about advertising here.
  3. #2

    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    Sweden
    Posts
    450

    Default

    Uhm what do you mean run out of adressess? A www. adresses can never be out? Or u mean the network cant handle more:S?

  4. #3

    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Posts
    52

    Default

    IP has something like 4 million IP addresses available due to the binary 32 bit limitation the same issue applies with 32bit operating systems. you cannot use over 4gb because of 32 bit binary code cannot allocate extra address space for the memory.

    IpV6 has 128 bit hexadecimal register which allows for a huge number of addresses. Each single person on this planet can have something like 1 million ip + addresses.

    The new system will be confusing because it will basically require reallocating those 4 million IPv4 into IPv6 and then setting up networking equipment to deal with the change which pretty much requires every network admin to re-create the network topology from scratch (huge nightmare). And compensate for the new address length.

    Each website like Amazon is hosted on a server(s) and they each have a public static ip linked to a DNS entry which is propagted to other DNS Networks. So once you run out of ip addresses you can not have new websites as each website has its own indvidual static public ip address. You can have two websites on the same ip however the 2nd it will just redirect the original website. Pretty useless unless you want extra domains.
    Last edited by muckcase; February 3rd, 2011 at 04:08 AM.

  5. #4

    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    Pittsburgh, PA, USA
    Posts
    229

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by muckcase View Post
    The new system will be confusing because it will basically require reallocating those 4 million IPv4 into IPv6 and then setting up networking equipment to deal with the change which pretty much requires every network admin to re-create the network topology from scratch (huge nightmare). And compensate for the new address length.
    From what I've heard the switch over shouldn't be too bad in general. Most modern software came built in with IPv6 support, including networking equipment. So, unless it's older than 10 years, I think the switch over is easy...I could be wrong. Don't know much about networking.

  6. #5

    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    In A City Near You!
    Posts
    166

    Default

    I read about this yesterday. Crazy how much the internet has blown up in the last 10 to 12 years.

  7. #6

    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    Texas
    Posts
    414

    Default

    not a big deal imo. IPv6 was brought up at least 12-13 years ago and has been implemented in commercial, business, and home consumer environments.
    Last edited by nivlac; February 3rd, 2011 at 08:41 AM.

  8. #7

    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Posts
    27

    Default

    I can't wait to have an IPV6 address. IPV4 is overrated anyway.

  9. #8

    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Toronto, Canada
    Posts
    204

    Default

    It was bound to happen. It's exciting in a way, it shows how technology and the internet is changing so rapidly.

  10. #9

    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    Texas
    Posts
    414

  11. #10

    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Posts
    125

    Default

    Just went through this topic in the computer science class, I don't think end user will notice that change unless someone screw this transition up badly though.

Page 1 of 2 1 2 LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. Replies: 1
    Last Post: August 30th, 2010, 09:01 AM
  2. IPv4 addresses to run out in 12 months or less
    By The_Terminator in forum Computers
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: July 28th, 2010, 02:20 PM
  3. Internet to run out of IP addresses in 500 days
    By freak Demagog in forum Computers
    Replies: 29
    Last Post: June 22nd, 2010, 09:02 AM
  4. Replies: 35
    Last Post: April 7th, 2009, 03:23 AM

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •